Is the government prying too deeply into our sexual identity and medical history, and if so, what are the limitations? Professor Scott Skinner-Thompson makes the case that the government is infringing on a fundamental right to informational privacy and why it's time for the courts to recognize and adequately protect that right.

After 30 years on death row, Henry McCollum was exonerated with the help of DNA evidence for the murder and rape of a young girl. With the risk of wrongful conviction so high, can capital punishment still be justified? Stanford Law Professor John Donohue scrutinizes the controversial practice and the particular biases that surround it.

In recent years, the US has escalated its use of targeted killings as an integral part of its national security strategy, but the question remains, is the program legitimate?
Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU’s National Security Project, takes a critical look at the legal foundation for the use of military drones under both US and international law.

In recent years, startling reports have brought to light the expansive breadth and depth of the NSA's domestic surveillance of ordinary Americans. Judge Andrew Napolitano discusses domestic mass data collection and the constitutional and privacy issues implicated.